President Trump will make good on a campaign promise to Cuban-American hardliners on Friday when he will reverse much of the Obama administration’s liberalization of relations with the Communist country.

The president will ban US tourist travel to the island, restate the importance of the trade embargo and institute a broad prohibition on financial transactions with companies controlled by the Cuban military, according to Politico, which got a draft version of the new policy.

The administration said it wanted to end business transactions that benefited the Castro regime while the Cuban people get squat in return.

“My administration’s policy will be guided by key US national security interests and solidarity with the Cuban people,” the draft of the eight-page Presidential Policy Directive said, according to the website.

“I will seek to promote a stable, prosperous, and free country for the Cuban people. To that end, we must ensure that US funds are not channeled to a regime that has failed to meet the most basic requirements of a free and just society.”

The directive means that Americans can no longer travel to Cuba from the US.

“The policy the Trump administration is announcing regarding Cuba based on President Trump’s core conviction that what the Cuban exile community is asking for is right and just,” the White House said in a written statement to the website.

“The oppressors of the Cuban people are the Cuban government who have increased repression on the island against dissidents … since reestablishing diplomatic relations. Prior to that, it was not clear to some if the Obama policy toward Cuba would work; today it is clear that the Obama policy toward Cuba does not.”

While tourism to Cuba is banned by federal law, the Obama administration had let people travel to Cuba and spend money under “people to people” educational trips.

GOP Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, where many Cuban Americans still despise the Castro regime, applauded the move even though it could cost airlines and other tourism businesses money.

“The airlines might complain that they will see less demand for travel because travelers can no longer spend money at the military-run properties. But whatever reduction we do see in travel is direct proof of how much the military is benefiting from the current policy,” Rubio told the website.

Trump made the promise during his campaign for the GOP nomination, with Florida emerging as a key swing state.

He won the state’s 29 electoral votes by narrowly defeating Hillary Clinton, 49 to 47.8 percent.